Tuesday, January 25, 2011

CFP: U.S. Intellectual History Conference

Posted by
Clara Altman

The Intellectual History Blog has posted a call for papers for the 2011 U.S. Intellectual History Conference in New York City.This will be the fourth annual USIH conference put on by the Society for U.S. Intellectual History.This year’s conference theme is “Narratives,” and Pauline Maier will deliver the keynote address.I had a wonderful experience at the USIH conference when I presented a paper in 2009.It is a great conference for graduate students and a great opportunity for legal historians whose work has an intellectual history component to get feedback from scholars in intellectual history.

Here’s the CFP:

Call for PapersU.S. Intellectual History: Narratives

Fourth Annual U.S. Intellectual History Conference and Annual Meeting of the Society for U.S. Intellectual HistoryCo-sponsored and hosted by the Center for the Humanities,The Graduate Center of the City University of New YorkNew York CityNovember 17-18, 2011Submission deadline: June 15, 2011

The Conference Committee of the Society for U.S. Intellectual History (S-USIH) invites paper and panel proposals for its fourth annual conference, to be held at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York, on November 17-18, 2011. S-USIH is very pleased to announce that the keynote address will be delivered by Pauline Maier of MIT, author ofRatification: The People Debate the Constitution, 1787-1788andAmerican Scripture: Making the Declaration of Independence.

This year’s conference theme is “Narratives.” The theme highlights the fact that stories are essential to the study of American thought. Intellectual historians catalogue and interpret the narratives used by the figures they study, and construct narratives themselves in composing their own accounts of the past. The committee invites participants not only to reflect on narrative itself, but to compare and contrast it with other forms of expression, such as argument or declaration. While proposals that relate to the theme are particularly welcome, the conference committee encourages all submissions that are relevant to any aspect of U.S. intellectual history.

The most typical panels will feature three academic papers and one commentator, who will also serve as the panel chair. But submissions for sessions that will use other formats are also invited. Varieties of alternate sessions might include: roundtables (a series of ten-minute extemporaneous presentations on a topic followed by discussion among the panel and audience), discussion panels (in which the papers are circulated online in advance of the conference and the entire session is devoted to discussions of them), brownbags (one-hour long, lunchtime presentations), “author meets critics” events, retrospectives on significant works or thinkers, interviews, or performances. The conference organizers are happy to consider any proposed format that will fit a two-hour long session slot or a one hour-long lunch session (though session organizers should be aware that there are fewer of the latter than the former).

Submissions of both individual papers and complete panels (or alternate-format sessions) will be accepted, as well as applications from those who would be interested in moderating a session. Paper submissions should feature a 200-word abstract of the paper itself, and a one-page CV. Panel proposals must include an abstract of each presentation, a separate description of the panel itself, and one-page CVs for all participants. Submissions for alternate-format sessions must also include a full description of the proposed format. Those interested in chairing a session or commenting should send a CV indicating areas of expertise and interests. All submissions must include a postal and email address, and phone number for each participant. Individual papers in traditional panels should last no more than twenty minutes. All persons appearing on the program will be required to register for the conference and to become members of S-USIH.

All submissions must be emailed as attachments in MS Word or Google docs format. Deadline for submissions is Wednesday, June 15, 2011.

2 comments:

This is a small meeting -- great for grad students and anyone who enjoys a conference where you can actually talk to other participants. I'll be there, on a program committee organized panel on Dan Rodgers' new book, Age of Fracture. Hope to see other legal historians!